Abstract

The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine significantly enhances adult visual cortex plasticity within the rat. This effect is related to decreased gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) mediated inhibition and identifies fluoxetine as a potential agent for enhancing plasticity in the adult human brain. We tested the hypothesis that fluoxetine would enhance visual perceptual learning of a motion direction discrimination (MDD) task in humans. We also investigated (1) the effect of fluoxetine on visual and motor cortex excitability and (2) the impact of increased GABA mediated inhibition following a single dose of triazolam on post-training MDD task performance. Within a double blind, placebo controlled design, 20 healthy adult participants completed a 19-day course of fluoxetine (n = 10, 20 mg per day) or placebo (n = 10). Participants were trained on the MDD task over the final 5 days of fluoxetine administration. Accuracy for the trained MDD stimulus and an untrained MDD stimulus configuration was assessed before and after training, after triazolam and 1 week after triazolam. Motor and visual cortex excitability were measured using transcranial magnetic stimulation. Fluoxetine did not enhance the magnitude or rate of perceptual learning and full transfer of learning to the untrained stimulus was observed for both groups. After training was complete, trazolam had no effect on trained task performance but significantly impaired untrained task performance. No consistent effects of fluoxetine on cortical excitability were observed. The results do not support the hypothesis that fluoxetine can enhance learning in humans. However, the specific effect of triazolam on MDD task performance for the untrained stimulus suggests that learning and learning transfer rely on dissociable neural mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Visual perceptual learning (VPL) is an established model of adult human brain plasticity that involves improved visual task performance with training (Epstein, 1967; Gibson, 1969, 1991; Watanabe and Sasaki, 2015)

  • Our primary hypothesis was that fluoxetine would increase the rate and magnitude of VPL compared to placebo in observers with normal vision

  • Increased GABAmediated inhibition due to an acute dose of triazolam was found to selectively impair improved motion direction discrimination (MDD) that was due to learning transfer

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Summary

Introduction

Visual perceptual learning (VPL) is an established model of adult human brain plasticity that involves improved visual task performance with training (Epstein, 1967; Gibson, 1969, 1991; Watanabe and Sasaki, 2015). Transfer of learning to untrained stimuli and tasks can occur (Ahissar and Hochstein, 1997; Liu, 1999; Liu and Weinshall, 2000; Xiao et al, 2008; Jeter et al, 2009; Green et al, 2015) indicating that higher-level decision making areas are involved in VPL. In agreement with this idea, primate neurophysiological data have revealed learning induced changes within the decisionmaking area LIP (lateral intraparietal sulcus) but not in MT following motion discrimination VPL (Law and Gold, 2008). Neuromodulation and fMRI studies in humans have shown that VPL involves decision-making areas (Kahnt et al, 2011; Chen et al, 2015, 2016)

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